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F I S C A L I M P A C T R E P O R T
SPONSOR Trujillo
ORIGINAL DATE
LAST UPDATED
1/24/08
HB 350
SHORT TITLE State Historian’s Legacy and Education Project
SB
ANALYST Ortiz
APPROPRIATION (dollars in thousands)
Appropriation
Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
FY08
FY09
$500.0
Recurring
General Fund
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Expenditure Decreases)
Relates to HB 14, HB 18, HB 57, HB 82, SB 172, and SB 216
Relates to Appropriation in the General Appropriation Act: $15.0 thousand is included in the
Commission of Public Records appropriation request for maintenance of the NM history website
in its current configuration.
ESTIMATED ADDITIONAL OPERATING BUDGET IMPACT (dollars in thousands)
FY08
FY09
FY10 3 Year
Total Cost
Recurring
or Non-Rec
Fund
Affected
Total
$5.0*
$5.0*
$10.0
Non-
recurring General
Fund
(Parenthesis ( ) Indicate Expenditure Decreases)
* Costs to the agency to administer the contracts for this project average about $5.0 per year.
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
LFC Files
Responses Received From
Commission of Public Records (CPR)
Department of Cultural Affairs (DCA)
Public Education Department (PED)
SUMMARY
Synopsis of Bill
House Bill 350 appropriates $500 thousand from the GENERAL FUND to the Commission of
Public Records for the Office of the State Historian’s legacy and education project.
pg_0002
House Bill 350 – Page
2
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
The appropriation of $500 thousand contained in this bill is a RECURRING expense to the
GENERAL FUND. Any unexpended or unencumbered balance remaining at the end of FISCAL
YEAR 2010 shall revert to the GENERAL FUND.
The $5.0 per year figure provided in the Estimated Additional Operating Impact table, above, is
an estimate of the costs of those activities and includes the costs of resources required to manage
the operations of the program, select contractors; review contracts; review verify and certify
contract compliance; establish and process contracts, requisitions, purchase orders and vouchers
through the state SHARE system; prepare and monitor budgets; etc.
SIGNIFICANT ISSUES
House Bill 350 would appropriate $500.0 to the Commission of Public Records for expenditure
in FY09 and FY10 for the Office of the State Historian’s Legacy and Education Project. The
appropriation would allow the Office of the State Historian, a division of the agency, to begin
implementing through contracts, a K-12 Educational Framework and Curriculum for the New
Mexico Digital History Project. The appropriation would in part serve to continue to build
content—historical essays, photographs, images of documents and oral histories, all directly
corresponding, however, to the New Mexico Department of Education Content Standards and
Benchmarks, K-12, for Social Studies, Humanities, and History. The appropriation would also
allow the agency to contract with an educational consultant in collaboration with the Public
Education Department (PED) to initiate statewide teacher training workshops for the project.
PERFORMANCE IMPLICATIONS
One important component of the mission of the Commission of Public Records is advocating an
appreciation and understanding of NM history and includes the following:
1.
Foster and facilitate an understanding and appreciation of New Mexico history and culture
through education, research, and community outreach. Specifically, working with
universities, K-12 schools, educators and students consistent to foster understanding and
appreciation for New Mexico history.
2.
Expand and enhance NM history website.
ADMINISTRATIVE IMPLICATIONS
The Commission of Public Records explains that the contract approach envisioned here provides
a means of realizing the missions of the agency and Office of the State Historian without adding
permanent staff, it does carry added administrative responsibilities. Contracts will have to be
developed, reviewed, finalized, entered into SHARE by the Administrative Services Division
(ASD), and monitored for compliance. As appropriate, requisition, purchase orders and
vouchers will have to be processed by the ASD. Budgets will have to be developed and
monitored. Since the ASD fiscal staff has only two employees, plus the deputy agency
head/ASD Director/CFO, and must support all agency activities, how these additional duties and
those entailed in other related bills will be managed will require careful planning.
pg_0003
House Bill 350 – Page
3
CONFLICT, DUPLICATION, COMPANIONSHIP, RELATIONSHIP
There are some 11 bills in at this time involving Office of the State Historian-related activities.
Nine of those are for money for the digital history project but for a land grant component (eight
for $25.0, one for $15.0), not for this particular project. House Bill 261 also contains a $500.0
appropriation but for regional historians.
OTHER SUBSTANTIVE ISSUES
According to the Public Education Department, the Office of the State Historian has taken steps
to support K-12 education in New Mexico. Through these funds the Office of the State Historian
is committing to supporting teachers and classrooms in connecting the State Historian’s
digitalization work of primary source documents with the teaching about New Mexico
communities. Under this funding, staff will be hired to provide curricular connections and
models for teachers to access along with the professional development to ensure that teachers are
prepared to use these resources in meaningful ways. It is important for teachers to be able to
take New Mexico’s primary source documents, have or create authentic curriculum around their
use and translate into authentic learning lessons and units for students across the state. This will
add valuable new resources to the teaching of New Mexico history K-12 as well as provide
teachers with needed professional development.
It also adds that 2005 New Mexico History graduation requirement was put into place without
planning time or materials and the districts have been challenged by this so having these
resources come forward with the professional development would be a tremendous asset to our
teachers and schools in meeting this requirement.
EO/mt